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tv   The Five  FOX News  January 26, 2023 2:00pm-3:00pm PST

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decision will take some off the fence. daron shaw, thank you. comments from president biden, calling for peaceful protests after memphis police officers are charged in the death of a man. the video is fairly gruesome. we're told it will be released sometime tomorrow. no way of knowing. here's the "the five." >> jeanine: i'm judge jeanine pirro. it's 5:00 in new york city. this is "the five." >> jeanine: a desperate joe biden is trying to change the subject after his poll numbers are sinking fast, and he faces an onslaught of investigations.
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in his first major speech since losing the house, biden says to hell with working with the gop to make your lives better. he is looking for a fight, dishing the kumbaya talk, and unleashing on republicans trying to rein in his reckless spending. >> this ain't your father's republican party. this is a different breed of cat, as they say. republicans inflict this pain on the american people. why? why? they seem determined to be the party of chaos and catastrophe. they want to eliminate the irs, going to eliminate it completely. only guys that look at the complicated tax returns that people have, and replace the iro taxes, right? except with a 30% national sales tax. let me be clear. if any of these bills somehow got passed the house and senate, i will veto them.
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>> jeanine: oh, wow. okay. well, let me start with -- oh, but joe isn't -- sorry, guys. i was so stunned by that. joe isn't going this alone. the white house seem to have sent democrats the same talking points. >> it's a silly doggone idea. like i said, over my dead body, we'll fight every day until this thing goes down to defeat. >> what are the republicans doing? team extreme. the team consisting of extremists who are willing to detonate the american economy. >> it feels like republicans only want to have these extreme discussions when a democrat is occupying the white house. >> jeanine: dana, i'll go back to you again. >> dana: ha-ha-ha. >> jeanine: taking the offense when you're in charge of an economy that is a disaster. gas prices are up 50%. i won't go through the list.
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>> dana: the republicans should play that cardi b clip over and over again. why is everything so expensive? how are people supposed to live? that actually has a lot of pull. i have to say, i think the democrats, they are doing exactly what you would want to do politically to put them in a position to help him run for re-election. he goes to virginia today. that's an important state for them. it's pretty much a purplish state, because obama had done very well there. but youngkin won. he's doing a lot of these things before the state of the union on february 7th. you'll see more of it. he's doing two fundraisers for the dnc next week. the white house is doing everything they need to do to put him in position to run. they're not letting him do a lot of interviews, you'll notice that, because he has the documents issue to deal with. they also prereleased so much of the speech, including punch lines and jokes, because they want those to be in the print
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media, because you won't get a clean sound bite. that's fine. they know that about him. they also know, what are the republicans week on? say this for the republicans, at least they're talking about ideas. okay? can we not at least have a discussion about what we're going to do if social security runs out of money in 2033? that's 10 years from now. you're thinking about kids like cleo, jesse jr., your grandson. i know that kid's name. you know, we can -- we can have a conversation as americans to say what would actually be a good way to preserve medicare and social security going into the future? it's ridiculous to suggest that people are all of a sudden going to have a 30% national retail sales tax on top of all the taxes they're paying. kevin mccarthy said it's not going anywhere. other republicans have said it's not going anywhere. i don't fault them for having ideas. i fault the media for not asking
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joe biden and the democrats, well, what is your idea? is your idea to pass so much in spending that you cause inflation, and look back and say this was caused by the trump tax cuts of 2017? that doesn't make any sense. biden wants to run his last campaign, and the media shouldn't let him do it. >> jeanine: i'll go right to you, jessica. didn't joe biden go on the biggest spending spree in american history? >> jessica: no. donald trump is responsible for 30% of the national debt. you asked the question. i answered it. donald trump is responsible for more than of the national debt, period, end of story. those are what the numbers say. we also had a good economic report today. i know, brian, you spoke about it this morning on "fox and friends." 2.1% increase in consumer
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spending. those are good indicators. people are talking about the layoffs. the layoffs are in one sector, in tech, and they're right-sizing the fact they overhired in 2021 -- 2021, sorr. they're going back to the mean there. they paid people way too much. gave people fancy titles. they couldn't afford to that. i'm not for calling everybody a maga republican, part of what he was talking about today, but he does have an economic record to run on. he does have the fact that you have important representatives, so much so that people thought he could be speaker, this kevin hearn, who said we have to make hard decisions about what's going on with social security and medicare. he's part of a conference of 160 conservative republicans who have said that they want to look at changing the retirement age. that's something that nancy maze, a republican senator, said is a nonstarter. mccarthy said that as well. get your caucus in line. if you don't want democrats talking about the fact that there are people in your caucus,
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important to you, by the way, saying we should raise the retirement age, people are going to pay attention to it and vote accordingly. >> dana: didn't kevin hearn get one vote for speaker? >> jessica: he's not out there -- >> jeanine: the truth is when donald trump left office, inflation was 1.7. inflation under joe biden has gone to 8.7, 8.9, the highest in 40 years. i mean, come on. let's talk about the truth. the truth is that you've got a 41%, 50% increase in fuel, eggs. i don't have to tell you what americans are going through. the economy is great? i don't think so. >> brian: the everyday person that goes shopping, that's what the economy feels like. to your point, dana, on politics, this is my point when they think they can get clicks this morning from what i said. my point this morning was two months after the election we're doing politics. if there was ever a time to lead
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the country, not your party, it's two months after an election and you haven't said i'm running for re-election again. so just tell me your vision. you don't have to say, i wonder what buddy carter wants to do. the fair tax might have some possibilities, but politically it's not the strongest thing, but it's one congressman who brings it forward, like rick scott brings one thing forward, and grabs on to it. i said to myself, he's 80 years old. if you want to talk about the economy, you want to say be honest about it, he should still be upset at the inflation side. he should still talk about energy, the decisions he's making to green the economy. he should talk about that the job market is going wobbly. and say for his point of view, look, i want things to be better, i'm proud of what i've done, but get the big picture and compare it to other countries. joe biden's strongest argument, i think, is if you compare our economy to other countries, we're doing good. my point was you don't always have to make the republicans the
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villain. i understand elections. but be the president for once. this is what i did, this is disappointing me, this is what's worrying me. the big picture, when i look around, meet with european leaders, we're doing better than pretty much everyone, except inflation with japan. >> jeanine: okay. all right. jesse? >> jesse: the economy is about feel. the economy doesn't feel good because wages are down. last year's stock market was down year to year. we're not making money as of last year. and if you add the gas prices and nasty inflation, and the fact they had to jack up mortgage rates, you can't afford to buy a house, it's like renter nation. there is good stuff. he had a good gdp number. he had stronger gdp numbers last year. there's consumer spending. job numbers are strong, but
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people are getting laid off in tech because we're preparing for a light recession. everybody knows there's going to be a light recession next year. i don't like when republicans propose big new economic ideas when they're not in power. i like having ideas. just keep those ideas to yourself and wait for the campaign to start. campaign's two years away. i'm not showing a lot of skin right now, like a boxer. you know what i mean? all of a sudden you're out here, and he lands shots to the body. 30% sales tax? maybe that's a good idea. >> jessica: it's not. >> jesse: i mean, he's opening up big gaping holes for joe to attack. what's the other thing? this guy in florida wants to slash entitlements? you don't do that. you don't say that. it's not a smart idea. another idea with entitlements, tell me everybody that's around 18-30 to start having babies. have a lot of babies. that will help with
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entitlements. >> brian: we should raise social security. >> jessica: that's click bait. >> jeanine: coming up, what is biden hiding? the administration refuses to give out information about joe's doc drama. ♪ ♪
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more on that later. bipartisan group of senators have had it up here with team biden stonewalling, lawmakers on the intel committee fuming after being denied to classified documents handled by president biden, president trump, and vice president pence, wanting to examine them to see if there's a danger to national security. >> we're left in limbo until somehow a special counsel designates it's okay for us to get briefed is not going to stand. there was a special counsel involved with the russian investigation, and this committee worked literally for years, . we've got a job to do, and we'll do it. >> i think i speak for every member of the committee. the position they've taken is untenable. >> until the administration stops stonewalling congress, there will be pain as a consequence for them. >> brian: mr. t channeling. but no amount of stonewalling can stop other shoes from dropping on the scam.
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the doj is reportedly prepared to obtain a warrant to search president biden's delaware house, the other one, the president's legal team not giving consent, and asking all presidents and vice presidents to recheck their personal records, except dan quayle, who says he's not received an inquiry, but he's willing to check his stuff. jesse, do you think that senator warner will go as far as senator tom cotton and refuse to confirm ambassadors or nominees until they come clean on what exactly was in joe biden's stuff? >> jesse: the one thing that bring the parties together, not seeing the stuff they're supposed to see. >> brian: are you exercised? >> jesse: no, i'm not, because they're entitled to do oversight. like you said, during the russian investigation, they got briefed. they got briefed all the time. at least they got briefed. the dni comes in, this was a scheduled briefing, and she
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goes, you know what, i don't even know what the documents say. she's walled herself off from the documents. so it looks like the department of justice is the only one that has any idea what's in these documents, and that's not fair, because the senate is supposed to do oversight to see if there's an intelligence compromise and mitigate that somehow. they're being cut out of this thing. if you're hunter biden, you have documents on the dining room table, in the garage, they have a birthday party that day, he stays out till 2:30 in the morning, i lost my key to the house, can you on the backdoor so i can come in? this is the same time he's bribed by the chinese, same time he's fooling around with the stripper, and he of all people is losing his house keep, while the documents are out in the garage, on the dining room table. if i was a senator, republican or democrat, i'd want to know
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what's in those documents. >> brian: if it's country first. everything has been party first. who else doesn't want to know what's in those documents they found? president biden. do not tell me. >> dana: seems like they've made a mountain out of a molehill. if it's something from 2008, the actionable intelligence, if it was really serious, is probably not that accurate anymore. going back to dan quayle, squeaky clean, he doesn't have documents, don't worry about it. if biden said initially, wow, that was wrong, i should have been more responsible. gosh, i looked at the documents, everything is fine. remember when they did the mar-a-lago raid, the media ran away with a story that he was selling nuclear secrets to the saudis. >> greg: right. or the russians. >> dana: why doesn't the media do that now? aside from jesse. [laughter]
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>> brian: judge, right now, when you think about what's going on right now, the president said the exact opposite of what he should say. no regrets, no there there. we got plenty of there there. >> jeanine: plenty of there there. to go off the point dana you were just talking about, when it was trump, drip, drip, drip, every day it was something else, the nuclear codes, russia, wherever he was sending them to. then the layout of the classified documents, the top-secret documents, like a narrative, like for a school child. look, there they are, right on the screen. when it comes to joe biden, no layout. none of that stuff. here's the difference. first of all, according to senator ron johnson, in 2014, when hunter biden and his partner were trying to get the contract, that's when an email, and that laptop contained information, something like 13,000 words or something, like everything else, give me this, i'll meet you here with, you
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know, his thing -- this assessment of what was happening in ukraine that could possibly be from a classified document. here there's good cause to make a connection between what documents were seized and whether or not they were at the same time consistent with what they were doing. now, i want to say one more thing. the job, jesse, as jesse just said, is oversight. it has to do with the separation of powers. the fact there was an investigation is not relevant. there was an investigation during the russian investigation. >> brian: right. >> jeanine: everybody was entitled to know what was going on then. joe biden and his administration are stopping everyone from having access. >> brian: jessica, is it worth for the president to take heat from his own party and a bipartisan group? can you blame anyone for thinking that something is so bad it's worth taking the heat from his own side? >> jessica: sunlight is the greatest disinfectant. talk to the american people
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more. he has great respect for the process, w, which is markedly different from what president trump did. you need allies, heading into a re-election -- >> brian: what about strategy? >> jessica: everybody on both sides of the aisle have questioned the strategy. even john kirby was -- >> jeanine: are you sure about that? >> jessica: yeah. >> jeanine: have you spoken to her? >> jessica: i know how to watch television. i can see how he's struggling, and the principal is not making her life answer. >> jeanine: have a message. >> jessica: the message is karine jean-pierre is not giving the message? you know that you're doing wrong here. many so mark warner and dick durbin, longtime allies of president biden, right, going
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back decades. these aren't just new senators that popped up the other day, like alex padilla. i don't really know him. these people have been in the biden camp for a long time, pushing them to make comments i'm sure they don't want to have to make. you have to explain going into a scif, returning the documents, how it's possible they got out of there. >> brian: and at least one of those those documents is from his days as senator. so you're talking about 2007. >> jeanine: right. >> jessica: right. >> brian: it's a long time ago. >> jeanine: why haven't they gone in and searched the rehoboth house? why? >> jessica: mar-a-lago is a place where there are people being entertained. there are parties there every single night. that was cause for concern about how things were being kept. i understand that hunter biden is a big party animal, but it's not the same thing as having -- president trump is in a tuxedo
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all the time, entertaining tons of foreign nationals -- >> jeanine: have you ever been there? >> jessica: no. i'm not invited. you don't assume. also mike pence did that -- >> jeanine: don't point your finger. >> brian: there's a residence area, a public area, and the place was locked up. you have no idea what his office looks like if you're a member of the club. 24 minutes after the hour. democrats have a new way to stop crime. just have everyone hire private security. fantastic. if your business kept on employees through the pandemic, getrefunds.com can see if it may qualify for a payroll tax refund of up to $26,000 per employee, even if it received ppp, and all it takes is eight minutes to get started. then we'll work with you to fill out your forms and submit the application; that easy. and if your business doesn't get paid, we don't get paid.
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♪ ♪ >> jesse: you're on own in democrat-run cities, liberals
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are encouraging you to hire private security to stay safe. a group of store owners taking matters into their own hands by hiring guards to keep order, and mayor eric adams praising the strategy. >> it is a wise strategy, because i say this over and over again, not only must the numbers reflect safety but people must feel safe. people must feel safe. we must make sure that businesses are safe in the city. that's what nypd is doing. >> jesse: this isn't the first time. plenty of business owners who had no choice but to hire private security. i interviewed an armed guard hired by our philly gas station right there. look at him toting that ar. judge, if you're the mayor, you probably want to say something like, we don't want store owners to have to hire armed security. we'd like the nypd to be able to do their job. >> jeanine: or one better, as the mayor, i know that you pay taxes, and i know that you work
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hard to even make, you know, to make any money on your business, and you shouldn't have to hire your own security, but the truth is when you defund the police to a billion dollars, as they did in new york city, and when the rules are so tough, the police feel like they're going into a war zone with their hands behind their back, then the local businesses are left to hire their own security. first they started by locking down the items, right? then they started by putting your cameras in, hiring more security. then they had security escorts, walking people to their cars, because somebody gets shot or killed outside of the store. so now people are left to their own devices. the owners as well. so the stores are suffering. they're not getting their tax money's worth. there's an increase in violence as the theft goes up. this is when people say, i want to have a gun. >> jesse: it's hard to come back from covid or a crime wave when you look like a third world
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country, armed guards standing out certain shops. certain shops can't afford this, though,. >> jessica: that's what i was thinking, probably a luxury that the store owner, or the philly gas station, was making enough they could afford this, using people who need to make a living, and rightly so. the answer isn't good job on you. the answer is i'm focused on making sure new york city, or philadelphia, wherever you're in charge of, you feel the police can't get there in enough time to help you with a theft going on, whatever is going on. it was a poor answer, or not a solutions oriented answer. with the number of people retiring from the police force early, or not going into it, because it is such a bad climate, a lot of them are going into private security. you take your retirement, your pension wouldn't be the same, but this is where we're headed
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if these things aren't dealt with. >> jesse: then when you try to hire more cops and train them, antifa hides in the trees and shoots them in the belly. >> dana: the mayor never talks about the lack of prosecution. we talked about this on the show. the judge explained it very well. if you're a police officer, you know you'll get those guys that beat up our weatherman on the subway, and you know the next morning the prosecutor is going to let them go, you think why do i do this job? why am i here? people feel demoralized. also just to get -- do you know on the closing of the shops, there's a drugstore in -- i believe it's ied to be 24/7. now it's only open from 11:00 to 11:20 every day so people can pick up their medicines, but that's the only thing you're allowed to do. that's happening in communities. also to get really political, if you think about what biden was saying about the republicans on the economy, if i was a republican, all i'd say all day
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long, what a world, they defund the police and expect you to pay for private security. that's the world that the democrats want. just repeat it a hundred times, even though they'll say we don't believe that, but if that's the way they play on the economy, do that on crime. >> jesse: that's a good idea. brian? >> brian: thinking about not having mardi gras, because there's so few cops, so everyone is hiring their own, including professional sports teams. a certain time of night you don't get gas. it's too dangerous. for this particular story, these guys are getting $18 an hour, called patrol ambassadors. doing the story this morning, curtis says new york city is 4,000 cops down. they still have to call 9-1-1. it's back to the cops that weren't there to begin with. that's why this is terrible.
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56% of small retail businesses experienced theft over the last year, and 86% say the crime leads to violence most of the time. all i want to do its open up a deli, and have to refusal to sell potato chips. doesn't seem like a good scenario. >> jesse: honey and vinegar, those are the best. >> brian: they are good. >> jesse: uup next, we try to warn you, america, but it might be too late. robots are about to take over. ♪ ♪ hi. i'm charlie kirk. i started turning point usa to do the work to help save america. right now, the world economic forum and global elites are planning the great reset. this is why i want to send you my exclusive book for a gift of any amount.
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cole hauser is an award winning actor who has starred in good will hunting too fast, too furious and the current hit show yellowstone. beyond his impressive career, he is a proud supporter of the tunnel to towers foundation. i was able to spend some time with cole and his family to reflect on those who have sacrificed so much to defend our freedom. i know how much you care about america and our veterans and all the things. but you have such a platform now. yeah. and to share that with us that we need to get the word out that we have to take care of these great heroes and their families. you know, as i started to be more and more successful, i was like, how can i help? but when i heard of the tunnel of the towers,
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and i met brandon in idaho and his family, i was like, wow. there's actually a charity where we know where the money's. going to go. we have 95.1% of every dollar goes to our programs. and i think brandon's a great spokesman for t2t and and his wife, shannon, has two daughters. i mean, oh, my god. they're just special families. so pretty much, if you put your life on the line, if something goes bad, they're there. that's awesome. yeah. they're incredible people, man. you saw all the stuff we put in these homes, right? i was i was blown away. and they deserve it. they earned it. this is not of course, we give them a mortgage free home, but look what they gave up. they gave up their bodies so, cole, why should americans give donate help? tunnel to towers foundation. i mean, is there any better organization to help the people that has fought for this country and the freedoms that we have? it's that simple. it is that let's take care of each other. and you're going to join us on that mission.
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thank you. hey, i'm cole hauser. i want you to join me in supporting our nation's heroes and their families. it's only $11 a month. go to t2t dot org. you see, son, with a little elbow grease, you can do just about anything. thanks, dad. that's right, robert. and it's never too early to learn you could save with america's number one motorcycle insurer. that's right, jamie. but it's not just about savings. it's about the friends we make along the way. you said it, flo. and don't forget to floss before you brush. your gums will thank you. -that's right, dr. gary. -jamie? sorry, i had another thought so i got back in line. what was it? [ sighs ] i can't remember. ♪ ♪ >> dana: the power of artificial intelligence is getting pretty scary. it could up-end life as we know it and make your job obsolete.
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we've warned you about its human life responses since it launched two months ago. it passed a wharton business school test, law school exams, and wrote a job application that was better than 80% of the ones humans could do. british researchers are warning their part time that ai could, quote, kill everyone and should be regulated similar to nuclear weapons. that doesn't seem extreme, does it? and congress is keeping an eye on the next steps. >> left unregulated, unchecked, it can cause harms. we've already seen the harms it's caused. >> obviously something we need to pay close attention to. >> there definitely needs to be oversight. we have to take it seriously. it affects all levels of government and certainly questions of privacy. >> dana: what really bothers me about that, jesse, by the time they're talking about that, it's too late! it's over! this stuff is going to be here. jesse jr. is going to be utilizing it. we have to figure out a way to
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make it work for us and not kill everyone. we have to figure it out, right? >> jesse: that's my plan. i'm not worried about it, because it's like having a robot butler, put it in between c-3po and r2-d2. it's your pilot, your cleaning lady. let's say i want to give a speech at a banquet. hey, print me out a speech for a banquet. boom, comes out the belly, i give a great speech, and someone threatens my life on the way home, it can use a gun. like steve hawking with deadly force. this thing can do my taxes, make my investments. i think everyone is going to get this thing. what you don't want is contact lenses that tell you what you're looking at, giving you lots of
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intel. don't want implants. you want a side buddy that goes with you everywhere you go, a robot butler. >> dana: everybody will have a side buddy? >> brian: chatbot, whatever it's called, got a c plus on an exam. if year going to have virtual reality, can wet an "a" student? it's like saying, don't use the car, it will kill horse sales. you can't stop it. this is done. we can hold on tight. my worry is, it's going to outthink us, but you'll never get five robots to do "the five." >> dana: judge, something that's happening, i think, in february, there's going to be the first-ever case where the lawyer for the defense is going to be the chat gpt guy, and they'll use that and see how it goes. >> jeanine: look, if you're worried about losing your job, the first thing you should do is get a job so unique to you that
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no one else can do it. for example, you should be in a subjective line of work, right? this is, whatever you want to call it, your buddy, he can write a speech, give you facts, but he can't do something subjective like art and say that art is beautiful, or "jesse watters primetime." the whole idea of being a judge, you can put an ai lawyer in front of me, but you still need a judge to make that determination. >> brian: those are the rules. >> dana: you have a young daughter. what do you think her future holds with ai? can you imagine? >> jessica: no. we'll be so ill equipped to understand. this will be absurd levels of kids these days. what freaked me out, when i saw the chat gpt stuff, you combine it with the boston dynamics dog that's climbing and dancing --
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>> jesse: that's what i'm going to with my little buddy. put ai15 in the, you know, dynamics dog, and that's i'm going for with my butler. >> dana: and all democrats want to defund the police, get private security, you'll have private security. you know what, he will be your doctor too. robots can do everything. >> jesse: get the sprinter out of my thumb. >> dana: "the fastest" is up next. ♪ ♪
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that was the best call i could've made. i'm rich barnes. it's hard for people to know how much their accident case is let our injury attorneys know he how much their accident cget the best result possible. ♪ ♪ >> jessica: welcome back. it's time for "the fastest." first up, you may have seen this viral video of what appears to be an uber eats delivery guy wandering on to a basketball court during a live game to deliver mcdonald's. it left the game announcers totally shocked. >> there he is, right there. >> who's he delivering it to? >> the ref. the ref said give it to me later. >> jessica: it turns out, it was just a prank. the university where it happened, saying he was wearing a mike, while someone filmed him, and done too internet exposure.
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i saw this on "sportscenter." >> brian: is that funny? it is pretty funny, but why would you walk on to the court? that's pretty serious. >> jeanine: if we had ai, that's what would hap. >> dana: what if a player thought it was an unsafe situation, and knocked him out. greg would have known it was a prank immediately. >> brian: how did he get into the stadium to deliver mcdonald's? you need a ticket. jesse? >> jesse: i can't believe brian had to explain that one. yes, you do need a ticket to get into the stadium. you have to have mcdonald's at the game? >> jessica: internet exposure. it worked. okay. up next, stuck in a dead-end job that pays very little. not if you're ai. consider this. a guy made six figures just by
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walking dogs. he went from making under $40,000 to a year to an empire, including an app and employee. he's making bank by walking fido. how much do you pay your dog walker? >> jeanine: i don't have a dog walker in new york. when i was in florida, i'd pay a dog walker. she'd come in with three dogs. $20 for an hour. now it's 15 minutes. she got her exercise, had different dogs. i guarantee she made more than that. they make a fortune, it all cash, and they don't care. >> dana: they're worth every penny. i'm glad this guy had an entrepreneurial experience. he started to start a business. this is the american dream. this is great. also wouldn't you rather work with dogs all day? just kidding. >> jessica: do you guys have a dog walker? >> jesse: not anymore. we used to see the guys in the
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city, and they'd have 40 leashes. i mean, you make a lot of money that way. >> jessica: you got to have more to have the double, so they have a friend. >> brian: i've met my dog walker. it's me. i think it's sad, because a job as a teacher, which is important, and $38,000 a year, you're better off with a cocker spaniel. to me that's sad, that teachers have to supplement their income. >> dana: i agree, that's why you should go to florida to get a raise. >> jeanine: even a cop. you put your life on the line, get all kinds of beef. be a dog walker. >> brian: they will train your dog for $60 an hour. >> jeanine: what did your dog need to learn? >> brian: that my clothing is not chewable. it happens all the time. >> jeanine: what color was this
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tie, brian? >> brian: it was magenta. >> jeanine: it was turquoise. i did not know. it's hard to match, never replaced. >> jeanine: i'll get you a new one. >> brian: okay. >> jessica: we have to go unfortunately. "one more thing" is up next. >> tech: when you have auto glass damage, trust safelite. this dad and daughter were driving when they got a crack in their windshield. [smash] >> dad: it's okay. pull over. >> tech: he wouldn't take his car just anywhere... ♪ pop rock music ♪ >> tech: ...so he brought it to safelite. we replaced the windshield and recalibrated their car's advanced safety system, so features like automatic emergency braking will work properly. >> tech: alright, all finished. >> dad: wow, that's great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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>> judge jeanine: time now for one more thing. dana? >> dana: i'm honored to bring you this update. there is a very positive update about our friend and colleague benjamin hall. benjamin is opening up in his new book saved a war reporter's mission to make it home. he dives into his fight for survival almost one year after our fox news team was hit by russian fire while reporting in ukraine. two of our colleague shefsz ski and -- lost their lives in the attack. benjamin was severelily wounded. in his first life tv interview
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he read a passage from the book about the moments after their vehicle was hit. >> out of this crippling nothingness a figure came through and i heard a familiar voice as real as anything i had ever known, daddy, you have got to get out of the car. very badly injured shrapnel in the eye and throat and i saw my young daughters and they brought me back and i found the strength. i opened my eyes and i managed to crawl out of the car and i was in this incredible team of doctors and nurses who helped all the wounded. they rebuilt me physically and mentally, gave me such strength. to are me this book is about being saved boy all these people. >> dana: it's an incredible story. we are very thankful that benjamin is on his way to recovery. i have heard the book is amazing. can you preorder it now. it's called saved and hits the shelves on march 1st. >> brian: it was amazing to hear
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that story. we have two months until it comes out. preorder it now. he was talking to pierre for 45 minutes. i did not know that. >> dana: beautiful. >> brian: going back and forth for 45 minutes. >> judge jeanine: amazing thing peter died during that period of time. >> dana: yeah. >> judge jeanine: it's a stunning -- got to be an incredible. >> dana: i heard amazing read. definitely plea order. >> jessica: i was really how proud he is as he should be of the body of work that he has done as a war reporter. >> jesse: you can hold your phone up to the screen right there and take you right to harper collins where you can hit purchase. >> brian: credit to fox sports. they do a great thing. they are going to be hosting and i will be at the super bowl. "fox & friends" will be there. the weekend show and radio show. but they are doing something ahead of time in phoenix. fox sports host committee. fox sports and fox teaming
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together spent a day with the purple hearts home to renovate a arizona veteran's bathroom, kitchen and more. great organization and more. helping out in the city in which is hosting the super bowl. the whole city benefits from the super bowl. you don't have to go to the game. when they come in, everybody benefits. there is a whole bunch of things going on. fox is not waiting for the nfl. they are doing it on their own. >> judge jeanine: that's great. jessica? >> jessica: watch out dating app. #home depot dating has ladies headed to the nearest home depot in search of love. 3.6 billion views many sharing success stories expeditions to the hardware store calling what they call husband material while others weren't as lucky lurking in the store. >> dana: quite idea. >> jessica: it is cute. >> jesse: where can i find a mop? >> jesse: don't go chasing water falls, especially reverse water falls. look at this reverse water fall.
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have you ever seen a reverse water fall? >> dana: what's going on. >> jessica: is it real? >> jesse: a video out of utah. no idea. >> dana: bryce canyon? >> jesse: this is very rare. "jesse watters primetime" was hunter biden an intelligence asset? was hunter biden working for the cia? bet you never thought about that one before, did you? >> jessica: never did. do they hire people like hunter? okay. i didn't know that men loved diamonds as much as women do. but, apparently some do. rapper polo g showcased his new diamond chain on instagram which doubles as a functioning iphone case. just a pendant of the iphone contains 500 grams of 14-carat white gold and 90 karates of diamonds. the piece into the 6 figures. would any of you wear this? >> jesse: you would, judge. >> judge jeanine: now would be robbed in two seconds in new york. >> dana: private security though
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because all the democrats want to defund the police. >> judge jeanine: that's right. the democrats do that and it's just not right, is it jessica? just not right. >> dana: not right. >> jessica: we're the worst. >> brian: coming up one nation on saturday tim scott and matt taibbi will be on. >> judge jeanine: that's it for us. "special report" is up next. hey, bret. >> bret: brian kilmeade gets it in right under the wire there. that was really good. thanks, judge. good evening. welcome to "special report." i'm bret baier. president biden touts very solid economic news and promises not to cooperate with congressional republicans. not to on one issue. we'll look at the present and future of artificial intelligence with meta president for global affairs nick clegg and the extreme dangers of street drugs using animal tranquilizers to extend the high. >> bret: but, first, breaking tonight, five fired memphis police officers ar

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